At 8 hectares (20 acres), the octagonal Place de la Concorde is the
largest square in Paris. It is situated between the
Tuileries and the Champs-Elysées.
Creation
In 1763, a
large statue of king Louis XV was erected at the site
to celebrate the recovery of the king after a serious
illness.
The square surrounding
the statue was created later, in 1772, by the architect
Jacques-Ange Gabriel. It was known as the place Louis XV.
Place de la Concorde
Guillotine
In 1792, during the French revolution, the statue was replaced by a another, large statue, called 'Liberté'
(freedom) and the square was called Place de la Révolution.
A guillotine was installed at the center of the square
and in a time span of only a couple of years, 1119 people
were beheaded here. Amongst them many famous people
like King Louis XVI, Marie-Antionette, and
revolutionary
Robespierre, just to name a few. After the
revolution
the square was renamed several times until
1830, when it was given the current name 'Place de la Concorde'.
Cleopatra's Needle
Obelisk
In the 19th century the 3200 years old obelisk from the temple of Ramses II at Thebes was installed at the
center of the Place de la Concorde. It is a 23 meters (75 ft)
tall monolith in pink
granite and weighs approximately
230 tons. In 1831, it was offered by the Viceroy of
Egypt to Louis Philippe. Three obelisks were
offered by the Viceroy, but only one was transported
to Paris.
The obelisk - sometimes dubbed 'L'aiguille de Cléopâtre' or Cleopatra's Needle - is covered with hieroglyphs picturing the reign of pharaohs
Ramses II &
Ramses III. Pictures on the pedestal describe the transportation
to Paris and its installation at the square in 1836.
Obelisk's Pedestal
The obelisk - sometimes dubbed 'L'aiguille de Cléopâtre' or Cleopatra's Needle - is covered with hieroglyphs picturing the reign of pharaohs
Statue of galloping horse
Statues & Fountains
At each corner of the octagonal square is a statue representing a French city: Bordeaux, Brest, Lille, Lyon, Marseille,
Nantes, Rouen and Strasbourg. They were installed in
1836 by Jacob Ignaz Hittorf, who redesigned the Place
de la Concorde between 1833 and 1846.
That same year
a bronze fountain, called 'La fontaine des Mers' was
added to the square. A second one, the 'Elevation of
the Maritime' fountain, was installed in 1839. Both
fountains were designed by Hittorf.
Fontaine des Mers
Orientation
From the Place de la Concorde you can see the Arc de Triomphe (west), the Madeleine (north), the
Tuileries (east) and, across the Seine, the Palais Bourbon, now the Assemblée
Nationale(south).
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